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Vol. CXXXVI—No. 56

Friday, April 13, 2012

columbiaspectator.com

Democrat sues N.Y. over state sen. lines

Franzen reads for affordable housing BY JEREMY BUDD Spectator Senior Staff Writer National Book Award-winning author Jonathan Franzen made a low-profile appearance on Thursday, joining 100 Upper West Siders in ringing in the fifth anniversary of a local affordable housing building. The “Freedom” novelist read excerpts from his forthcoming set of essays at the Semiperm apartment building, on 102nd Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue. To commemorate the anniversary, Carol Lamberg, executive director of the Settlement Housing Fund, which runs Semiperm, invited Franzen, who is friends with her stepson. He read from his essay, “I Just Called to Say I Love You,” which will be published in his collection “Farther Away,” to be released later this month. Semiperm has been a unique venture from the start, offering transitional housing for struggling single-parent families. “We saw a need for this intermediate,” Lamberg said. “We got the financing together for the building and they built 23 one-, two-, or three-bedroom apartments and we came out of it debt-free.” The building was funded by the city’s Inclusionary Zoning Program, which offers squarefootage incentives for buildings that offer housing for low-income individuals. “I did not know that there was

SEE FRANZEN, page 2

Local resident argues addition of district is not constitutional BY CASEY TOLAN Spectator Senior Staff Writer

The Hindu Students Organization is bringing more than 1,500 pounds of paint to Pupin Plaza for this Saturday’s Holi celebration. “Be prepared, two months down the line, if you’re at a doctor’s visit and there’s red paint in your ears,” HSO board member Rithu Ramachandran, CC ’12, said. “It happens.” Holi, which is also called the Festival of Colors, was officially on March 8. People traditionally celebrate by throwing colored powder at each other. The Hindu holiday, which marks the end of winter and the beginning of spring, has come to symbolize the superiority of good over evil. The festival is named after the demon Holika, who, as the traditional story goes, was the sister of a demon king who wanted his son Prahlada dead. After many failed

Alpha Standards program requires fraternities and sororities to raise a minimum of $60 per member and complete an average of 20 hours of community service per member each year. Each chapter must also attend one community service event as a group, as well as “organize and execute a program or event once a year that benefits an organization” of its choice. Beta Theta Pi President Ben Ramalanjaona, CC ’13, expressed skepticism about the fundraising component of the Alpha Standards. “It is not necessarily the case that having more people present at a philanthropy event equates to more money raised,” Ramalanjaona said in an email. “That is part of the reason why we have not actively done fundraising in the past, because it depends heavily on the willingness of other people to give.” Beta Theta Pi received three stars. “Both our national organization and chapter place a greater emphasis on philanthropy expressed through community service hours rather than dollars raised,” Ramalanjaona said. In accordance with that emphasis, Beta Theta Pi hosted a midnight sandwich run earlier this year, with members making hundreds of sandwiches and handing them out to homeless people throughout the city. Brothers in the latest pledge class helped put together a Christmas event for local residents at the Columbia Presbyterian Church. Renick noted that Greek organizations are in a particularly good position to do work for charity. “Being a Greek organization

SEE ALPHA, page 2

SEE SENATE, page 2

HENRY WILLSON / SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

PRIME CUTS

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Brooklyn resident Rico Cirignano, an employee at Harlem Shambles, concentrates on preparing a cut of meat.

West Harlem’s new butcher shop expanding, adapting BY ANUSHKA LOBO Columbia Daily Spectator A new butcher shop on Frederick Douglass Boulevard is reviving the West Harlem meat market, one fresh cut at a time. Harlem Shambles, which opened on Frederick Douglass Boulevard at 116th Street this winter, sells grass-fed cuts sourced from local farms and butchered on the premises daily. “We get a lot of positive feedback from the people here in

the neighborhood,” owner Tim Forrester said. “It’s been a while since there was a butcher here, so people are telling us that this is the kind of meat they are looking for, that they have been trying to buy.” The first few months of business have been spent adapting to the demand in the West Harlem meat market and “ramping up and expanding the product line” with sausages, meat pies made in-house, and various stocks and fresh bread.

Hindu student group preps for Holi celebration BY BIANCA DENNIS Spectator Staff Writer

Redistricting drama in New York might not be over— if a lawsuit headed by a local Democratic leader is sucTHE cessful, it could VOTE 2012 be back to the drawing board for State Senate district lines. Upper West Side resident and State Democratic Committeeman Daniel Marks Cohen is the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit, Cohen v. Cuomo, which was argued last Friday. The lawsuit alleges the addition of a State Senate seat by the Republican majority in the chamber is unconstitutional. Adding a 63rd seat— which would likely be situated upstate—in the 62-member chamber is widely seen in political circles as an attempt by Republicans to solidify their majority. Opponents like Cohen also say the district lines the Republicans drew for the 63 seats are highly partisan. “This takes gerrymandering to a new level of shamelessness,” Cohen said. “It’s really just blatant and it completely disregards the will of the voters.” New York’s constitution includes a provision that allows for adding of additional seats as warranted by population growth. For decades, Cohen said, the Senate lines were drawn using the same method to count voters. After the 2000 census, the State Senate, controlled by Republicans, disavowed that method, calling it “unconstitutional and inappropriate for purposes of determining State Senate districts.” But after the 2010 census, Republicans backtracked and used the method in part to count population growth and draw new lines. “They used whatever method they could to get to the answer they wanted,” Cohen claimed. In a legal memorandum, the attorneys of State Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos stated that the petitioners in the lawsuit “fail to overcome the ‘strong presumption’ that the Legislature’s redistricting plan is constitutional; and they have not carried their considerable burden to show ‘beyond a reasonable doubt’ that the 2012 Senate Plan violates the New York Constitution.” The petitioners “cannot possibly hope to demonstrate … that the Legislature’s choice of a 63-seat Senate was not ‘reasonable’ or rational,” the memorandum reads. According to Cohen, one of the most egregious examples of gerrymandered Senate districts is the 31st district, represented by State Senator Adriano Espaillat—the shape of which Cohen compared to Chile. “It runs the entire coast of Manhattan, from 181st Street to 23rd Street,” Cohen said. “It’s absurd—in some cases it’s

attempts to kill Prahlada, the king asked Holika to kill him. Holika, who was immune to fire, tried to sit with Prahlada in the middle of a fire, but the God Vishnu—to whom Prahlada prayed regularly—protected him, and Holika was killed instead. “It’s a testament to worship and the power of god to protect you,” HSO co-coordinator Rohit Iragavarapu, CC ’12, said. Still, HSO members emphasize that Holi is not only a religious celebration. Ramachandran said that even in India, religion has taken a back seat to celebrating. “I think now one of the bigger significances of Holi is really the idea of equalizing. It’s a great equalizer,” she said. “Especially given caste, socioeconomics, and all of those conditions in India … you have a time to forget those boundaries and barriers, and everybody comes together as one people,” she added. “And I think that’s

great, especially now.” Students of all faiths are free to attend HSO events, and board members hope that, no matter their background, they will leave with more knowledge about Hinduism and its culture. “One of our mandates, if nothing else, is about spreading awareness about Hinduism, educating people about our traditions, our philosophies,” Iragavarapu said. “I think we live in a changing world, and it’s important for us to kind of spread a common understanding of our traditions. And Holi is fun.” Iragavarapu also had some words of advice for students planning to attend the celebration. “We order 1,500 pounds of paint, more or less, and we tie it to little sandwich baggies, and what people should absolutely not do is throw the entire bag,” Iragavarapu said. “That’s very painful. And it’s also a waste of paint.” bianca.dennis @columbiaspectator.com

FILE PHOTO

The past few years have been a period of major growth on Frederick Douglass, with eateries such as Harlem Tavern, known for its outdoor patio, Lido, and 5 and Diamond all taking root in the area. Among the growth, however, there have been some closings as well. Nectar, a wine bar, closed in early March, and Society, a café, closed last fall. The development of the boulevard also has its critics, who see the character of the

neighborhood disappearing as high-end businesses hike up prices, pushing out locals. To foster the sometimescontentious growth, the owners of businesses along the boulevard from 110th to 124th streets formed the Frederick Douglass Boulevard Alliance earlier this year to promote the boulevard as the gateway to Harlem, keeping the street attractive and supporting each other’s businesses. SEE BUTCHER, page 2

Alpha Standards results met by mix of pride, concern BY YASMIN GAGNE Spectator Senior Staff Writer Greek organizations have had mixed reactions to the results of the Alpha Standards program, which were released in February. The 5-Star Alpha Standards of Excellence Program, which was introduced this year, requires fraternities and sororities to meet minimum standards for philanthropy, academics, and leadership development, among other categories. Nine organizations received five out of five stars, six organizations received four stars, and five organizations received three stars. Two fraternities—Psi Upsilon and Kappa Delta Rho—were placed on social probation for failure to adequately meet the standards. Some leaders of Greek organizations expressed concern over particular requirements, although most characterized the Alpha Standards program as reasonable, expressing a desire to highlight their philanthropy. Alpha Epsilon Pi President Matthew Renick, GS/ JTS ’13, said that he does not believe the Alpha Standards requirements are too onerous. “The ALPHA standards simply ask you to provide documentation of events and activities that are already occurring in one’s own chapter, and does not place an unfair burden on the organizations,” he said in an email. “Although Greeks are now held to a higher standard than every other student group on campus, we are comfortable accepting that responsibility, because we have long believed that Greeks are the best of the best,” he added.

HOLY DAY | Students celebrate Holi, the Hindu Festival of Colors on Ancel Plaza. The Hindu Students Organization is bringing more than 1,500 pounds of paint to this year’s event on Saturday.

charitable causes In terms of philanthropy, the

OPINION, PAGE 4

SPORTS, BACK PAGE

EVENTS

WEATHER

Meaning behind the Matzo

Lions kick off divisional play

OSS, Intelligence, and Knowledge of the World

Today

Intercultural Core

The baseball team heads up to Ithaca, N.Y. this weekend to play Cornell—the current leader in the Lou Gehrig Division—to play two consecutive doubleheaders.

Jessica Hills examines the Passover Seder’s contemporary significance.

Professor Rachel Chung on the role of the Global Core in a global world.

Tomorrow

Explore the intelligence community’s role in area studies at this conference. Second Floor, Heyman Center, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.

CoLab Spring Showcase This multimedia dance showcase will feature student dancers. Glicker-Milstein Theatre, Diana Center, 9 p.m.

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